Advertise Here
Deliver your message to thousands of readers every day.
Our readers are influential opinion makers - politicians, journalists and activists.
Our latest headlines
- Weekly Radio Address: Assembly Lead Water Negotiators Huffman, Caballero Discuss this Week’s Historic Agreement to Solve California’s Water Crisis
- Feinstein Once Again Flirts With Entering the Governor’s Race
- A Good Health Care Bill Emerging from the House
- Schwarzenegger Applauds Passage of Peripheral Canal/Dams Water Package
- "Historic" Water Deal Draws Both Praise and Criticism
- Republican State Senators Vote for Administrative Chaos, Backdoor Cuts in IHSS
- Assembly Budget Committee Follow-up Informational Hearing on Implementation on IHSS Program Changes
About Us
David Greenwald, Editor. (Contact David.)
CFC Education Foundation, Publisher. (Contact us.)
Got a news tip? Want to write a guest column?
Contact David here.
About California Progress Report.
Founded by Frank D. Russo (Publisher and Editor, 2006-08).
Sponsors
Books
Dems Pushback on California Budget: No Borrowing
By Robert Cruickshank
Friday's news that Democrats were considering borrowing to balance the budget, specifically the plan to raid transportation and local government funds, brought a vigorous response from Democratic leaders in the legislature. Don Perata, Karen Bass, and John Laird all issued statements claiming to not support budget borrowing, although the parsing of the words matters.
“Today's Los Angeles Times story about state budget negotiations is inaccurate and misleading. Democrats have never entertained massive borrowing as a solution to this year's budget problem. In particular, Democrats have never advocated nor believed in taking money from Propositions 1A, 42 and 10."...
"Doing another get-out-of-town-alive budget would do nothing to help this state but rather would endanger Californians' standard of living and economic future."
Budget Conference Committee Chair Senator Denise Ducheny chimed in with her own statement along these lines, and later in the day Bass and Laird added their stance. Karen Bass:
"Major borrowing is not part of the Democratic budget plan, and we don't believe it should be part of the final solution. Our proposal balances the budget with a mix of billions of dollars in difficult spending cuts and new revenues, similar to those proposed by a previous Republican governor. It's gimmick-free and honest. It closes our budget gap in a straight-forward manner, and eliminates out-year deficits."
John Laird:
“Any proposal to borrow from voter-approved propositions is not coming from those of us who want to balance the budget without borrowing or gimmicks.”
Strong words - but nowhere in them did anyone explicitly rule out borrowing from the transportation and local government funds. It's comforting to know that Democrats did not propose these plans and that they do not wish to use budget gimmicks - but a firm rejection of the plans is what we really needed to hear.
Sure, some might say we should not be negotiating in public. But if Republicans get to say "no new taxes" then surely Democrats are able to say "no new raids." As I argued yesterday raiding these funds would not only cause the state serious economic harm, but it would severely weaken the Democrats' political fortunes in the process.
Californians' opinion of the Legislature is low, and many don't trust their politicians. That gives the right wing a major opening to push through damaging things in the guise of populism. Democrats need to stand up to Republicans and protect working Californians. Refusing to even consider raiding the Prop 1A, 10, and 42 funds is a small but necessary place to start.
Robert Cruickshank is a historian, activist, and teacher living in Monterey. He is a contributing editor at Calitics.com and works for the Courage Campaign, in addition to teaching political science at Monterey Peninsula College. Currently he is completing his Ph.D. dissertation in US history, on progressive politics in San Francisco in the 1960s and 1970s. A native Californian, he was raised in Orange County and educated at UC Berkeley.
Comments
Thanks for writing this! We should all oppose the "raids" -- which include vast proposed cuts in public transit operations.
Now that people are shifting towards public transit, we must NOT cut it. If we want to stop climate devastation, end oil wars, and stop bankrupting our nation by sending all of our money away for oil -- we will need to harness this change, and encourage many more people to take transit. This won't work if California now cuts funding for transit operations, which would cause cuts in transit service.
Please call:
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
(916) 445-2841 (phone)
(916) 558-3160 (fax)
Thanks!
-Rebecca Kaplan
For more info see:
http://www2.actransit.org/news/articledetail.wu?articleid=36a28ea6&PHPSESSID=7172acedcb0b90c3cc14b75cedad855b
Posted by: Rebecca Kaplan at July 20, 2008 04:42 PM
Sorry, comments are temporarily disabled. We're doing a bit of server maintenance on the commenting area. We'll be back up and running shortly. Thank you for your patience.
Get Email Updates
Want the California Progress Report by email? Once a week, we'll send you the latest and greatest headlines.
© 2008 California Progress Report Our copyright and fair use policy.
Powered by Mandate Media. Logo design by Jane Norling.
RSS 